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Dive into the research topics where G. Christoph Korenke is active.

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Featured researches published by G. Christoph Korenke.


Nature Genetics | 2013

A de novo gain-of-function mutation in SCN11A causes loss of pain perception

Enrico Leipold; Lutz Liebmann; G. Christoph Korenke; Theresa Heinrich; Sebastian Gießelmann; Jonathan Baets; Matthias Ebbinghaus; R. Oliver Goral; Tommy Stödberg; J. Christopher Hennings; Markus Bergmann; Janine Altmüller; Holger Thiele; Andrea Wetzel; Peter Nürnberg; Vincent Timmerman; Robert Blum; Hans-Georg Schaible; Joachim Weis; Stefan H. Heinemann; Christian A. Hübner; Ingo Kurth

The sensation of pain protects the body from serious injury. Using exome sequencing, we identified a specific de novo missense mutation in SCN11A in individuals with the congenital inability to experience pain who suffer from recurrent tissue damage and severe mutilations. Heterozygous knock-in mice carrying the orthologous mutation showed reduced sensitivity to pain and self-inflicted tissue lesions, recapitulating aspects of the human phenotype. SCN11A encodes Nav1.9, a voltage-gated sodium ion channel that is primarily expressed in nociceptors, which function as key relay stations for the electrical transmission of pain signals from the periphery to the central nervous system. Mutant Nav1.9 channels displayed excessive activity at resting voltages, causing sustained depolarization of nociceptors, impaired generation of action potentials and aberrant synaptic transmission. The gain-of-function mechanism that underlies this channelopathy suggests an alternative way to modulate pain perception.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2013

A novel intellectual disability syndrome caused by GPI anchor deficiency due to homozygous mutations in PIGT

Malin Kvarnung; Daniel Nilsson; Anna Lindstrand; G. Christoph Korenke; Samuel C. C. Chiang; Elisabeth Blennow; Markus Bergmann; Tommy Stödberg; Outi Mäkitie; Britt-Marie Anderlid; Yenan T. Bryceson; Magnus Nordenskjöld; Ann Nordgren

Purpose To delineate the molecular basis for a novel autosomal recessive syndrome, characterised by distinct facial features, intellectual disability, hypotonia and seizures, in combination with abnormal skeletal, endocrine, and ophthalmologic findings. Methods We examined four patients from a consanguineous kindred with a strikingly similar phenotype, by using whole exome sequencing (WES). Functional validation of the initial results were performed by flow cytometry determining surface expression of glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) and GPI anchored proteins and, in addition, by in vivo assays on zebrafish embryos. Results The results from WES identified a homozygous mutation, c.547A>C (p.Thr183Pro), in PIGT; Sanger sequencing of additional family members confirmed segregation with the disease. PIGT encodes phosphatidylinositol-glycan biosynthesis class T (PIG-T) protein, which is a subunit of the transamidase complex that catalyses the attachment of proteins to GPI. By flow cytometry, we found that granulocytes from the patients had reduced levels of the GPI anchored protein CD16b, supporting pathogenicity of the mutation. Further functional in vivo validation via morpholino mediated knockdown of the PIGT ortholog in zebrafish (pigt) showed that, unlike human wild-type PIGT mRNA, the p.Thr183Pro encoding mRNA failed to rescue gastrulation defects induced by the suppression of pigt. Conclusions We identified mutations in PIGT as the cause of a novel autosomal recessive intellectual disability syndrome. Our results demonstrate a new pathogenic mechanism in the GPI anchor pathway and expand the clinical spectrum of disorders belonging to the group of GPI anchor deficiencies.


Brain | 2017

Genetic and phenotypic heterogeneity suggest therapeutic implications in SCN2A-related disorders

Markus Wolff; Katrine Johannesen; Ulrike B. S. Hedrich; Silvia Masnada; Guido Rubboli; Elena Gardella; Gaetan Lesca; Dorothée Ville; Mathieu Milh; Laurent Villard; Alexandra Afenjar; Sandra Chantot-Bastaraud; Cyril Mignot; Caroline Lardennois; Caroline Nava; Niklas Schwarz; Marion Gerard; Laurence Perrin; Diane Doummar; Stéphane Auvin; Maria J Miranda; Maja Hempel; Eva H. Brilstra; N.V.A.M. Knoers; Nienke E. Verbeek; Marjan van Kempen; Kees P. J. Braun; Grazia M.S. Mancini; Saskia Biskup; Konstanze Hörtnagel

Mutations in SCN2A, a gene encoding the voltage-gated sodium channel Nav1.2, have been associated with a spectrum of epilepsies and neurodevelopmental disorders. Here, we report the phenotypes of 71 patients and review 130 previously reported patients. We found that (i) encephalopathies with infantile/childhood onset epilepsies (≥3 months of age) occur almost as often as those with an early infantile onset (<3 months), and are thus more frequent than previously reported; (ii) distinct phenotypes can be seen within the late onset group, including myoclonic-atonic epilepsy (two patients), Lennox-Gastaut not emerging from West syndrome (two patients), and focal epilepsies with an electrical status epilepticus during slow sleep-like EEG pattern (six patients); and (iii) West syndrome constitutes a common phenotype with a major recurring mutation (p.Arg853Gln: two new and four previously reported children). Other known phenotypes include Ohtahara syndrome, epilepsy of infancy with migrating focal seizures, and intellectual disability or autism without epilepsy. To assess the response to antiepileptic therapy, we retrospectively reviewed the treatment regimen and the course of the epilepsy in 66 patients for which well-documented medical information was available. We find that the use of sodium channel blockers was often associated with clinically relevant seizure reduction or seizure freedom in children with early infantile epilepsies (<3 months), whereas other antiepileptic drugs were less effective. In contrast, sodium channel blockers were rarely effective in epilepsies with later onset (≥3 months) and sometimes induced seizure worsening. Regarding the genetic findings, truncating mutations were exclusively seen in patients with late onset epilepsies and lack of response to sodium channel blockers. Functional characterization of four selected missense mutations using whole cell patch-clamping in tsA201 cells-together with data from the literature-suggest that mutations associated with early infantile epilepsy result in increased sodium channel activity with gain-of-function, characterized by slowing of fast inactivation, acceleration of its recovery or increased persistent sodium current. Further, a good response to sodium channel blockers clinically was found to be associated with a relatively small gain-of-function. In contrast, mutations in patients with late-onset forms and an insufficient response to sodium channel blockers were associated with loss-of-function effects, including a depolarizing shift of voltage-dependent activation or a hyperpolarizing shift of channel availability (steady-state inactivation). Our clinical and experimental data suggest a correlation between age at disease onset, response to sodium channel blockers and the functional properties of mutations in children with SCN2A-related epilepsy.


PLOS Genetics | 2014

CNNM2 mutations cause impaired brain development and seizures in patients with hypomagnesemia

Francisco J. Arjona; Jeroen H. F. de Baaij; Karl P. Schlingmann; Anke L.L. Lameris; Erwin van Wijk; Gert Flik; Sabrina Regele; G. Christoph Korenke; Birgit Neophytou; Stephan Rust; Nadine Reintjes; Martin Konrad; René J. M. Bindels; Joost G. J. Hoenderop

Intellectual disability and seizures are frequently associated with hypomagnesemia and have an important genetic component. However, to find the genetic origin of intellectual disability and seizures often remains challenging because of considerable genetic heterogeneity and clinical variability. In this study, we have identified new mutations in CNNM2 in five families suffering from mental retardation, seizures, and hypomagnesemia. For the first time, a recessive mode of inheritance of CNNM2 mutations was observed. Importantly, patients with recessive CNNM2 mutations suffer from brain malformations and severe intellectual disability. Additionally, three patients with moderate mental disability were shown to carry de novo heterozygous missense mutations in the CNNM2 gene. To elucidate the physiological role of CNNM2 and explain the pathomechanisms of disease, we studied CNNM2 function combining in vitro activity assays and the zebrafish knockdown model system. Using stable Mg2+ isotopes, we demonstrated that CNNM2 increases cellular Mg2+ uptake in HEK293 cells and that this process occurs through regulation of the Mg2+-permeable cation channel TRPM7. In contrast, cells expressing mutated CNNM2 proteins did not show increased Mg2+ uptake. Knockdown of cnnm2 isoforms in zebrafish resulted in disturbed brain development including neurodevelopmental impairments such as increased embryonic spontaneous contractions and weak touch-evoked escape behaviour, and reduced body Mg content, indicative of impaired renal Mg2+ absorption. These phenotypes were rescued by injection of mammalian wild-type Cnnm2 cRNA, whereas mammalian mutant Cnnm2 cRNA did not improve the zebrafish knockdown phenotypes. We therefore concluded that CNNM2 is fundamental for brain development, neurological functioning and Mg2+ homeostasis. By establishing the loss-of-function zebrafish model for CNNM2 genetic disease, we provide a unique system for testing therapeutic drugs targeting CNNM2 and for monitoring their effects on the brain and kidney phenotype.


Molecular Genetics and Metabolism | 2014

Guanidinoacetate methyltransferase (GAMT) deficiency : Outcomes in 48 individuals and recommendations for diagnosis, treatment and monitoring

Sylvia Stockler-Ipsiroglu; Clara van Karnebeek; Nicola Longo; G. Christoph Korenke; Saadet Mercimek-Mahmutoglu; Iris Marquart; Bruce Barshop; Christiane Grolik; Andrea Schlune; Brad Angle; Helena Caldeira Araújo; Turgay Coskun; Luísa Diogo; Michael T. Geraghty; Goknur Haliloglu; Vassiliki Konstantopoulou; Vincenzo Leuzzi; Alina Levtova; Jennifer MacKenzie; Bruno Maranda; Aizeddin A. Mhanni; Grant A. Mitchell; Andrew P. Morris; Theresa Newlove; Deborah L. Renaud; Fernando Scaglia; Vassili Valayannopoulos; Francjan J. van Spronsen; Krijn T. Verbruggen; Nataliya Yuskiv

We collected data on 48 patients from 38 families with guanidinoacetate methyltransferase (GAMT) deficiency. Global developmental delay/intellectual disability (DD/ID) with speech/language delay and behavioral problems as the most affected domains was present in 44 participants, with additional epilepsy present in 35 and movement disorder in 13. Treatment regimens included various combinations/dosages of creatine-monohydrate, l-ornithine, sodium benzoate and protein/arginine restricted diets. The median age at treatment initiation was 25.5 and 39 months in patients with mild and moderate DD/ID, respectively, and 11 years in patients with severe DD/ID. Increase of cerebral creatine and decrease of plasma/CSF guanidinoacetate levels were achieved by supplementation with creatine-monohydrate combined with high dosages of l-ornithine and/or an arginine-restricted diet (250 mg/kg/d l-arginine). Therapy was associated with improvement or stabilization of symptoms in all of the symptomatic cases. The 4 patients treated younger than 9 months had normal or almost normal developmental outcomes. One with inconsistent compliance had a borderline IQ at age 8.6 years. An observational GAMT database will be essential to identify the best treatment to reduce plasma guanidinoacetate levels and improve long-term outcomes.


Molecular Genetics & Genomic Medicine | 2014

High mutation detection rates in cerebral cavernous malformation upon stringent inclusion criteria: one-third of probands are minors.

Stefanie Spiegler; Juliane Najm; Jian Liu; Stephanie Gkalympoudis; Winnie Schröder; Guntram Borck; Knut Brockmann; Miriam Elbracht; Christine Fauth; Andreas Ferbert; Leonie Freudenberg; Ute Grasshoff; Yorck Hellenbroich; Wolfram Henn; Sabine Hoffjan; Irina Hüning; G. Christoph Korenke; Peter M. Kroisel; Erdmute Kunstmann; Martina Mair; Susanne Munk‐Schulenburg; Omid Nikoubashman; Silke Pauli; Sabine Rudnik-Schöneborn; Irene Sudholt; Ulrich Sure; Sigrid Tinschert; Michaela Wiednig; Barbara Zoll; Mark H. Ginsberg

Cerebral cavernous malformations (CCM) are prevalent vascular malformations occurring in familial autosomal dominantly inherited or isolated forms. Once CCM are diagnosed by magnetic resonance imaging, the indication for genetic testing requires either a positive family history of cavernous lesions or clinical symptoms such as chronic headaches, epilepsy, neurological deficits, and hemorrhagic stroke or the occurrence of multiple lesions in an isolated case. Following these inclusion criteria, the mutation detection rates in a consecutive series of 105 probands were 87% for familial and 57% for isolated cases. Thirty‐one novel mutations were identified with a slight shift towards proportionally more CCM3 mutations carriers than previously published (CCM1: 60%, CCM2: 18%, CCM3: 22%). In‐frame deletions and exonic missense variants requiring functional analyses to establish their pathogenicity were rare: An in‐frame deletion within the C‐terminal FERM domain of CCM1 resulted in decreased protein expression and impaired binding to the transmembrane protein heart of glass (HEG1). Notably, 20% of index cases carrying a CCM mutation were below age 10 and 33% below age 18 when referred for genetic testing. Since fulminant disease courses during the first years of life were observed in CCM1 and CCM3 mutation carriers, predictive testing of minor siblings became an issue.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2017

Mutations in ATP6V1E1 or ATP6V1A Cause Autosomal-Recessive Cutis Laxa

Tim Van Damme; Thatjana Gardeitchik; Miski Mohamed; Sergio Guerrero-Castillo; Peter Freisinger; Brecht Guillemyn; Ariana Kariminejad; Daisy Dalloyaux; Sanne van Kraaij; Dirk J. Lefeber; Delfien Syx; Wouter Steyaert; Riet De Rycke; Alexander Hoischen; Erik-Jan Kamsteeg; Sunnie Y. Wong; Monique van Scherpenzeel; Payman Jamali; Ulrich Brandt; Leo Nijtmans; G. Christoph Korenke; Brian Hon-Yin Chung; Christopher Chun Yu Mak; Ingrid Hausser; Uwe Kornak; Björn Fischer-Zirnsak; Tim M. Strom; Thomas Meitinger; Yasemin Alanay; Gülen Eda Utine

Defects of the V-type proton (H+) ATPase (V-ATPase) impair acidification and intracellular trafficking of membrane-enclosed compartments, including secretory granules, endosomes, and lysosomes. Whole-exome sequencing in five families affected by mild to severe cutis laxa, dysmorphic facial features, and cardiopulmonary involvement identified biallelic missense mutations in ATP6V1E1 and ATP6V1A, which encode the E1 and A subunits, respectively, of the V1 domain of the heteromultimeric V-ATPase complex. Structural modeling indicated that all substitutions affect critical residues and inter- or intrasubunit interactions. Furthermore, complexome profiling, a method combining blue-native gel electrophoresis and liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry, showed that they disturb either the assembly or the stability of the V-ATPase complex. Protein glycosylation was variably affected. Abnormal vesicular trafficking was evidenced by delayed retrograde transport after brefeldin A treatment and abnormal swelling and fragmentation of the Golgi apparatus. In addition to showing reduced and fragmented elastic fibers, the histopathological hallmark of cutis laxa, transmission electron microscopy of the dermis also showed pronounced changes in the structure and organization of the collagen fibers. Our findings expand the clinical and molecular spectrum of metabolic cutis laxa syndromes and further link defective extracellular matrix assembly to faulty protein processing and cellular trafficking caused by genetic defects in the V-ATPase complex.


Genetics in Medicine | 2018

FOXG1 syndrome: genotype-phenotype association in 83 patients with FOXG1 variants

Diana Mitter; Milka Pringsheim; Marc Kaulisch; Kim Sarah Plümacher; Simone Schröder; Rita Warthemann; Rami Abou Jamra; Martina Baethmann; Thomas Bast; Hans Martin Büttel; Julie S. Cohen; Elizabeth Conover; Carolina Courage; Angelika Eger; Ali Fatemi; Theresa A. Grebe; Natalie S. Hauser; Wolfram Heinritz; Katherine L. Helbig; Marion Heruth; Dagmar Huhle; Karen Höft; Stephanie Karch; Gerhard Kluger; G. Christoph Korenke; Johannes R. Lemke; Richard E. Lutz; Steffi Patzer; Isabelle Prehl; Konstanze Hoertnagel

PurposeThe study aimed at widening the clinical and genetic spectrum and assessing genotype–phenotype associations in FOXG1 syndrome due to FOXG1 variants.MethodsWe compiled 30 new and 53 reported patients with a heterozygous pathogenic or likely pathogenic variant in FOXG1. We grouped patients according to type and location of the variant. Statistical analysis of molecular and clinical data was performed using Fisher’s exact test and a nonparametric multivariate test.ResultsAmong the 30 new patients, we identified 19 novel FOXG1 variants. Among the total group of 83 patients, there were 54 variants: 20 frameshift (37%), 17 missense (31%), 15 nonsense (28%), and 2 in-frame variants (4%). Frameshift and nonsense variants are distributed over all FOXG1 protein domains; missense variants cluster within the conserved forkhead domain. We found a higher phenotypic variability than previously described. Genotype–phenotype association revealed significant differences in psychomotor development and neurological features between FOXG1 genotype groups. More severe phenotypes were associated with truncating FOXG1 variants in the N-terminal domain and the forkhead domain (except conserved site 1) and milder phenotypes with missense variants in the forkhead conserved site 1.ConclusionsThese data may serve for improved interpretation of new FOXG1 sequence variants and well-founded genetic counseling.


Journal of Neurochemistry | 2017

Frequent genes in rare diseases: panel-based next generation sequencing to disclose causal mutations in hereditary neuropathies

Maike F. Dohrn; Nicola Glöckle; Lejla Mulahasanovic; Corina Heller; Julia Mohr; Christine Bauer; Erik Riesch; Andrea Becker; Florian Battke; Konstanze Hörtnagel; Thorsten Hornemann; Saranya Suriyanarayanan; Markus Blankenburg; Jörg B. Schulz; Kristl G. Claeys; Burkhard Gess; Istvan Katona; Andreas Ferbert; Debora Vittore; Alexander Grimm; Stefan Wolking; Ludger Schöls; Holger Lerche; G. Christoph Korenke; Dirk Fischer; Bertold Schrank; Urania Kotzaeridou; Gerhard Kurlemann; Bianca Dräger; Anja Schirmacher

Hereditary neuropathies comprise a wide variety of chronic diseases associated to more than 80 genes identified to date. We herein examined 612 index patients with either a Charcot‐Marie‐Tooth phenotype, hereditary sensory neuropathy, familial amyloid neuropathy, or small fiber neuropathy using a customized multigene panel based on the next generation sequencing technique. In 121 cases (19.8%), we identified at least one putative pathogenic mutation. Of these, 54.4% showed an autosomal dominant, 33.9% an autosomal recessive, and 11.6% an X‐linked inheritance. The most frequently affected genes were PMP22 (16.4%), GJB1 (10.7%), MPZ, and SH3TC2 (both 9.9%), and MFN2 (8.3%). We further detected likely or known pathogenic variants in HINT1, HSPB1, NEFL, PRX, IGHMBP2, NDRG1, TTR, EGR2, FIG4, GDAP1, LMNA, LRSAM1, POLG, TRPV4, AARS, BIC2, DHTKD1, FGD4, HK1, INF2, KIF5A, PDK3, REEP1, SBF1, SBF2, SCN9A, and SPTLC2 with a declining frequency. Thirty‐four novel variants were considered likely pathogenic not having previously been described in association with any disorder in the literature. In one patient, two homozygous mutations in HK1 were detected in the multigene panel, but not by whole exome sequencing. A novel missense mutation in KIF5A was considered pathogenic because of the highly compatible phenotype. In one patient, the plasma sphingolipid profile could functionally prove the pathogenicity of a mutation in SPTLC2. One pathogenic mutation in MPZ was identified after being previously missed by Sanger sequencing. We conclude that panel based next generation sequencing is a useful, time‐ and cost‐effective approach to assist clinicians in identifying the correct diagnosis and enable causative treatment considerations.


Brain | 2017

Delineating SPTAN1 associated phenotypes: from isolated epilepsy to encephalopathy with progressive brain atrophy

Steffen Syrbe; Frederike L. Harms; Elena Parrini; Martino Montomoli; Ulrike Mütze; Katherine L. Helbig; Tilman Polster; Beate Albrecht; Ulrich Bernbeck; Ellen van Binsbergen; Saskia Biskup; Lydie Burglen; Jonas Denecke; Bénédicte Héron; Henrike O. Heyne; Georg F. Hoffmann; Frauke Hornemann; Takeshi Matsushige; Ryuki Matsuura; Mitsuhiro Kato; G. Christoph Korenke; Alma Kuechler; Constanze Lämmer; Andreas Merkenschlager; Cyril Mignot; Susanne Ruf; Mitsuko Nakashima; Hirotomo Saitsu; Hannah Stamberger; Tiziana Pisano

&NA; De novo in‐frame deletions and duplications in the SPTAN1 gene, encoding the non‐erythrocyte &agr;II spectrin, have been associated with severe West syndrome with hypomyelination and pontocerebellar atrophy. We aimed at comprehensively delineating the phenotypic spectrum associated with SPTAN1 mutations. Using different molecular genetic techniques, we identified 20 patients with a pathogenic or likely pathogenic SPTAN1 variant and reviewed their clinical, genetic and imaging data. SPTAN1 de novo alterations included seven unique missense variants and nine in‐frame deletions/duplications of which 12 were novel. The recurrent three‐amino acid duplication p.(Asp2303_Leu2305dup) occurred in five patients. Our patient cohort exhibited a broad spectrum of neurodevelopmental phenotypes, comprising six patients with mild to moderate intellectual disability, with or without epilepsy and behavioural disorders, and 14 patients with infantile epileptic encephalopathy, of which 13 had severe neurodevelopmental impairment and four died in early childhood. Imaging studies suggested that the severity of neurological impairment and epilepsy correlates with that of structural abnormalities as well as the mutation type and location. Out of seven patients harbouring mutations outside the &agr;/&bgr; spectrin heterodimerization domain, four had normal brain imaging and three exhibited moderately progressive brain and/or cerebellar atrophy. Twelve of 13 patients with mutations located within the spectrin heterodimer contact site exhibited severe and progressive brain, brainstem and cerebellar atrophy, with hypomyelination in most. We used fibroblasts from five patients to study spectrin aggregate formation by Triton‐X extraction and immunocytochemistry followed by fluorescence microscopy. &agr;II/&bgr;II aggregates and &agr;II spectrin in the insoluble protein fraction were observed in fibroblasts derived from patients with the mutations p.(Glu2207del), p.(Asp2303_Leu2305dup) and p.(Arg2308_Met2309dup), all falling in the nucleation site of the &agr;/&bgr; spectrin heterodimer region. Molecular modelling of the seven SPTAN1 amino acid changes provided preliminary evidence for structural alterations of the A‐, B‐ and/or C‐helices within each of the mutated spectrin repeats. We conclude that SPTAN1‐related disorders comprise a wide spectrum of neurodevelopmental phenotypes ranging from mild to severe and progressive. Spectrin aggregate formation in fibroblasts with mutations in the &agr;/&bgr; heterodimerization domain seems to be associated with a severe neurodegenerative course and suggests that the amino acid stretch from Asp2303 to Met2309 in the &agr;20 repeat is important for &agr;/&bgr; spectrin heterodimer formation and/or &agr;II spectrin function.

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Matthias Rath

University of Greifswald

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Ute Felbor

University of Greifswald

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Iris Marquardt

Boston Children's Hospital

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Andrea Schlune

University of Düsseldorf

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Anibh M. Das

Hannover Medical School

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Barbara Zoll

University of Göttingen

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Christian Staufner

University Hospital Heidelberg

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Georg F. Hoffmann

University Hospital Heidelberg

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Ingo Kurth

RWTH Aachen University

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